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Valentine’s Day prompts romance, flower delivery scam alert

Valentine’s Day is just a few days away, but don’t let it make you vulnerable to scams.

With love in the air, Julie Wheeler, president and CEO of Better Business Bureau Serving Western Virginia said people become more vulnerable and the number of romance scams become more popular.

Especially during the pandemic, more people are dating online or finding love on social media.

According to the BBB Catfishing is the 11th most popular cybercrime, but the second-costliest.

Here’s BBB’s advice if you decide to date online:

If you’re a victim of a romance scam, report it. You can file a complaint through the BBB’s website and the bureau’s scam tracker. If you’ve sent money also alert your money transfer service.

For a look at the BBB’s study on romance scams and the different stages, click here.

Maybe you’re not looking for love and just shopping for your valentine. The BBB advised to keep your guard up for multiple types of flower delivery scams.

Wheeler said make sure you shop at a legitimate site, do your homework or simply shop local for gifts.

“Just be careful, if you’re making a purchase online you want to make sure you check the website, check with us (BBB). If it seems too good to be true, they’re making promises that don’t seem realistic, again chances are they’re just trying to take your money, always use a credit card when you’re buying online,” said Wheeler.

Other ways to avoid flower delivery scams is to call the company directly using a number you find yourself not the one in the email or ad, don’t accept a package or open emails from people or companies you don’t know and check BBB reviews or ratings.


Source: WSLS News 10

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